I used three loads that were shot in each rifle and chronographed just prior to the test. The loads were the exact same for each rifle with only the rifles being changed, not loads to get a better comparison and to see the effects of different chambers and barrel lengths. The rifles are as follows:Remington Model 600 - 6mm Remington - 18.5 " barrel

Ruger MKII - 6mm Remington - 22" barrel

Ruger #1B - 6mm Remington - 26" barrel

Tests were done at 25 yards. I must say that Nosler's rule the roost! These are some awesome bullets. The one E-tip that broke a couple petals off smacked the board I had the jugs sitting on which was placed on the ground. They all performed very well. On the sheets when I say almost out, that means the bullet almost exited the jug it was last in, 5 and almost out for example means the bullet almost exited jug #5. Saying it cut #5 for example means it almost got into number 5, and cut the jug and just about got in to it from #4.

Many years ago I bought my son a .243 Rem 600 and they are really a wonderful gun. He was just 12 then (he is 46 now) and still has it and kills deer and antelope with it every year. It was a great starter big game rifle for a youngster.

05-29-2012, 06:01 PM

6mm Remington

They are great rifles. I love mine. It is now my son's. Mine is a Centennial model, one of 1020 made in 1964 for the 100th Anniversary of the Montana Territory and 75th Anniversary of Statehood.

I restocked his as I had to cut it pretty short when he got it for Christmas right after he was 12. I still have the original stock and plastic floor piece/trigger guard. Added a new steel one when I restocked it with a Bell & Carlson composite stock with alum bedding. It is a tack driver!

05-30-2012, 11:22 PM

mcseal2

Thanks for the great review, I always love your posts. Where did you get the AB's to test, mine have been on backorder since they could be from Cabelas. I got a Ruger M77 all weather in 243 back from the gunsmith today with it's new Leupold and 2lb Timney trigger so I have another 6mm cartridge to work up loads for. My fiance and I should draw Wyoming 75 tags for goats this fall and are going hunting 2 weeks before the wedding. I will likely stick to "Maggie" the other woman in my life as my fiance sees it (my custom 264WM) but she will be shooting either this new rifle or my custom 6mm whichever she prefers. She has shot 3 whitetail with me now, but this is her first western hunt. We made a deal, she has to burn a 550 round brick of ammo through my 10-22 with a 2lb trigger from field positions before she can go on our hunt and keep her targets. I know wounding game is always a possibility, but I hate it and don't want to ruin a new hunter if it happens due to lack of practice. I have all the 22's and hunting rifles all set up with the Stoney point rapid pivot bipod attachments so they become real familiar to both of us. Anyway, thanks for the post and I'll let everyone know how the "early honeymoon" goes if we draw.

On a more serious note, your accubonds look similar to many I have recovered in larger calibers with their mushroom. My records show them all retaining real close to 60% of their weight, but I've never recovered one from game at less than 180yds and then at a real hard quartering angle. I could sure see less retention at 25yds, that is a true test. Do the 90gr E tips shoot well from a 1 in 10 like the new (to me) Ruger has?

05-31-2012, 07:17 AM

6mm Remington

I got my Accubonds from Shooter's Pro Shop. You can buy factory seconds from Nosler from them at good prices. They sell blemished bullets and over-runs at a great deal. $12.00 flat rate shipping too, so it's still cheaper than a store even if you just purchased one box, ONE!http://shootersproshop.com/index.php...product_id=723

My son has a Ruger MKII in 6mm Remington and the 90 gr. E-tip really shoots well in his rifle. I use H100V as that is what it seemed to really like. He took a cow elk at 350 yards laying down using a bi-pod two years ago. Hit her right behind her right shoulder, it angled forward and exited her off-side left shoulder. She went 20 yards and tipped over. I think they would work in the 1-10 also. Just have to try some and see.

I'm really confident that the 90 gr. Accubonds would work really well for antelope and deer though, even close up. They will also readily mushroom at longer distances. Great bullets. My son used his 300 WSM and 180 gr. Accubond on his elk this year. It hit rib going in at 90 yards. Smacked her spine, then angled down and broke her off shoulder and was under the hide in the meat about 1 inch. It performed perfectly even after all that bone it struck.

05-31-2012, 08:00 AM

Colorado Cowboy

[QUOTE=6mm Remington;28186]I got my Accubonds from Shooter's Pro Shop. You can buy factory seconds from Nosler from them at good prices. They sell blemished bullets and over-runs at a great deal. $12.00 flat rate shipping too, so it's still cheaper than a store even if you just purchased one box, ONE!
[URL]http://shootersproshop.com/index.php?route=product/product&product_id=723[/

Years ago when I lived in southern California and Sierra was still there, I used to go to their factory and buy seconds. Sold by the pound at really good prices. Most were just cosmetic blemishes. I would visually inspect, weight and do a concentricity check. About 80 to 90% were good. They did a lot sample and if a certain amount were defective, the whole batch was considered defective. Used lots of them and shot lots of game with them.

6mm 90 gr. E-tip at 25 yards stuck in the side of #5. I do not believe it tumbled, what I think happened is that one front edge hit a bit earlier and not completely squared up. It broke through the plastic on the edge and the rest continued and squared up to the jug.